University of Manitoba Press
Books from this publisher
School of Racism
A Canadian History, 1830–1915
The Art of Ectoplasm
Encounters with Winnipeg's Ghost Photographs
Plundering the North
A History of Settler Colonialism, Corporate Welfare, and Food Insecurity
Legends of the Capilano
Legends of the Capilano
Reclaiming Anishinaabe Law
Kinamaadiwin Inaakonigewin and the Treaty Right to Education
Establishing Shots
An Oral History of the Winnipeg Film Group
Western Voices in Canadian Art
I Will Live for Both of Us
A History of Colonialism, Uranium Mining, and Inuit Resistance
Lives Lived, Lives Imagined
Landscapes of Resilience in the Works of Miriam Toews
Aboriginal TM
The Cultural and Economic Politics of Recognition
Exactly What I Said
Translating Words and Worlds
Mennonite Farmers
A Global History of Place and Sustainability
Dadibaajim
Returning Home through Narrative
Inventing the Thrifty Gene
The Science of Settler Colonialism
Daniels v. Canada
In and Beyond the Courts
Indigenous Celebrity
Entanglements with Fame
mitoni niya nêhiyaw / Cree is Who I Truly Am
nêhiyaw-iskwêw mitoni niya / Me, I am Truly a Cree Woman
The Politics of the Canoe
Did You See Us”
Reunion, Remembrance, and Reclamation at an Urban Indian Residential School
Authorized Heritage
Place, Memory, and Historic Sites in Prairie Canada
Did You See Us?
Reunion, Remembrance, and Reclamation at an Urban Indian Residential School
COVID-19 in Manitoba
Public Policy Responses to the First Wave
Dammed
The Politics of Loss and Survival in Anishinaabe Territory
Compelled to Act
Histories of Women's Activism in Western Canada
Words of the Inuit
A Semantic Stroll through a Northern Culture
Decolonizing Discipline
Children, Corporal Punishment, Christian Theologies, and Reconciliation
Pathways of Reconciliation
Indigenous and Settler Approaches to Implementing the TRC's Calls to Action
In Good Relation
History, Gender, and Kinship in Indigenous Feminisms
Makhno and Memory
Anarchist and Mennonite Narratives of Ukraine's Civil War, 1917–1921
Making Believe
Questions About Mennonites and Art
A Very Remarkable Sickness
Epidemics in the Petit Nord, 1670 to 1846